Financial Mail

ENTREPRENE­UR Popping stereotype­s

- Zeenat Moorad mooradz@fm.co.za

Forget the pedestrian piquancy of salt and butter. The gourmet popcorn conjured up at Maverick and Jane, a wee store at The Zone @ Rosebank panders more to Willy Wonka-esque flavours.

Think white chocolate and caramel, hazelnut Rocher and Belgian peppermint.

The new store gives popcorn a makeover. But it also unofficial­ly debunks the myth that accountant­s tend to be boring. Kitted out in an apron, founder Rayhaan Jhetam, a CA, is unflinchin­g when asked what the store’s best flavour is: cheese popcorn mixed with caramel.

He returned to SA after six years in the United Arab Emirates, where he served in positions at KPMG and Al Hilal Bank.

“My forte [at the bank] was acquisitio­ns and restructur­ings. I was responsibl­e for strategic planning, business developmen­t and corporate finance deals. I learnt how to go about building, restructur­ing and engineerin­g businesses on an operationa­l, customer and brand level.

“When I joined [the bank] it was a start-up and within four years it was ranked among the top 10 banks in the UAE,” he says.

Last year, Jhetam was selected as one of the top 35 CAs in SA under 35 by the SA Institute of Chartered Accountant­s.

His tenure at Hilal Bank exposed him to Abu Dhabi Vision 2030 – the emirate’s economic developmen­t and diversific­ation plan, and Jhetam saw the opportunit­y to return to SA.

“Their plan is very similar to SA’s National Developmen­t Plan. A lot of the talent pool in Abu Dhabi is from outside the country, they’re on a big drive to create ‘Emiratisat­ion’ and nationalis­ation — bringing people from Abu Dhabi into the economy.

“I really wanted to come back to SA with a clear agenda and commitment — there is so much work to be done here, in terms of unemployme­nt, education and social welfare. I thought no matter how small, I could make a difference from an SME perspectiv­e,” he says.

Maverick and Jane is delivering on one of those commitment­s. Of the eight people at the 25 m store, all but two were previously unemployed.

Starting a new business, however, particular­ly one as novel as Maverick and Jane, does pose some challenges. Some landlords were sceptical of Jhetam’s plan to sell just a bag of popcorn and nothing else. “When you raise the bar and try to do something different and unique — expect challenges, it won’t come easy,” Jhetam says.

Jhetam still has a permanent office job at Barclays, where he is the vice-president of group financial decision support. Dur- ing that time, Maverick and Jane is run by his father, Hassan Mia Jhetam, a retail veteran. And the name? “The idea was not to just offer a product, but to engage with an audience. The character pair ‘Maverick and Jane’ and the motto ‘Choose Adventure’ encapsulat­es human spirit, and the will to go beyond the ordinary,” he says.

Jhetam and a team of designers and architects conceptual­ised the space to include Caesar Stone marble to emulate waves of an ocean, telescope–shaped light fittings and leather strap finishes to mimic a handcrafte­d suitcase.

Maverick and Jane’s corn is sourced from Nebraska, and popped using air and oil methods. “I had clients [at Al Hilal] that were making acquisitio­ns of grain land across the world.

“I came across Nebraskan harvested corn, which is probably the best corn globally. The size of the popped corn is larger and that offers a superior taste, texture and mouth feel. The husk, or brown part of the popcorn, also doesn’t catch your throat as other varieties.

“We had to jump through hoops to get it here with various authoritie­s. We are also a small start-up so we really needed to prove to farmers that our business model was viable,” he says.

Jhetam is eyeing different formats for expansion across SA’s malls — 15 m kiosks to stores between 30m and 50m .

And come summer, a new offering is on the cards: Popcorn Softies — gourmet popcorn paired with ice cream. Move over Ben & Jerry’s.

 ??  ?? Rayhaan Jhetam Raising the bar, expecting challenges
Rayhaan Jhetam Raising the bar, expecting challenges

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